288 F. 951 | D. Mass. | 1923
While this case came on to be heard on motion of petitioners for a temporary injunction to restrain-the enforcement of an order of the Interstate Commerce Commission, and on motion of. the United States to dismiss the petition, it was agreed at the argument that the cause should be deemed submitted for final hearing. The case involves the constitutionality of the act. The suit is to-annul an order of the Interstate Commerce Commission made March-6, 1923.
The Interstate Commerce) Commission was directed, under the amendment of section 22 of the Interstate Commerce Act, approved' August 18, 1922 (42 Stat. 827), to require, after notice and hearing, each carrier by rail subject to the act to issue, at such offices as may be prescribed by the Commission, interchangeable mileage or scrip-coupon tickets at just and reasonable rates, good for passenger carriage upon passenger trains of all carriers by rail subject to the act, with the privilege of granting certain exemptions as provided therein.
Pursuant to this amendment, proceedings were instituted by the-Commission, and as a result thereof the carriers named, except as exempted by the Commission, were ordered to issue nontransferable interchangeable scrip cotipon tickets in denominations of $90, obtainable at a reduction of 20 per cent, from the face value thereof.
“In' addition to the obvious spirit of the law, the-record warrants the view that a coupon ticket at a reasonably reduced fare should be established, at least for an experimental period.”
But this finding is followed by the statement that:
“In no other way can the apparent purpose of the law be given practical effect.”
It would seem fairly plain, therefore, that the furthest the Commission goes in its finding is to conclude that the record might justify the issuance of coupons at reasonably reduced rates for an experimental period; but there is nothing to indicate that the Commission, if it had felt free to exercise its own judgment, would have assumed the responsibility for establishing the reduced rate, even for an experimental period.
It is not entirely clear whether the majority of the Commission acted under an interpretation of the amendment that it was mandatory upon them so to reduce the rates for interchangeable scrip coupons tickets, or upon an assumed desire of the Congress, thoügh not expressed by the amendment in mandatory form, that they should .so do. In our judgment, the amendment is not mandatory in this respect. It does not prescribe that such coupons shall be issued at a reduced rate. Attempts to fix specific reduced rates by legislation were defeated. If the Congress had intended that some reduction should be mandatory, leaving only the amount thereof to be determined by the Commission under the phrase “just and reasonable,” such intent could readily have been expressed in clear language. The fair and natural interpretation •of the" language used by the Congress makes mandatory the issuance of such coupons at just and reasonable rates; but the ultimate, if not the original, determination of what shall be just and reasonable rates for such coupons is placed entirely upon the Commission.
If, therefore, the Commission acted upon a different interpretation •of the amendment, an error of law was the basis of its action and order. “The question is of the meaning of a statute, and upon that, of course, the courts must decide for themselves.” Chicago, Milwaukee & St. Paul Ry. Co. v. McCaull-Dinsmore Co., 253 U. S. 97, 40 Sup. Ct. 504, 64 L. Ed. 801. If, on the other hand, it acted upon the interpretation which we have found to be the correct interpretation of the amendment, but based its conclusions, not upon its own independent judgment, but upon what it believed to be the spirit and purpose of
In either case, its order is. without warrant of law, and for this reason it must be annulled.
The amendment itself is attacked as unconstitutional, in that in requiring the interchangeable scrip coupons it compels an interchange of credit between the railroads and thereby compels a service at the risk of complete financial loss in case of the insolvency of the road from which the scrip may have been purchased. In our judgment, the decisions of the Supreme Court upholding the Carmack Amendment (Atlantic Coast Line R. R. Co. v. Riverside Mills, 219 U. S. 186, 31 Sup. Ct. 164, 55 L. Ed. 167, 31 L. R. A. [N. S.] 7), the right of -a Regislature to compel the interchange of cars (Michigan Central R. R. Co. v. Michigan R. R. Commission, 236 U. S. 615, 35 Sup. Ct. 422, 59 L. Ed. 750), and of Congress to compel the establishment of joint rates (St. Louis Southwestern Ry. Co. v. U. S., 245 U. S. 136, 38 Sup. Ct. 49, 62 L. Ed. 199), necessarily involve the determination of the right to compel an interchange of credits as between the roads despite the possible loss from such an insolvency. As the Commission points out, the railroads themselves have maintained the interchangeable scrip coupons established under government operation, and have thus voluntarily established a similar interchange of credits over all roads except electric and short line carriers. Under the present amendment, the extent of such credit interchange is left to the Commission, and must, of course, be reasonable; but in requiring the interchange in respect to the scrip coupons, the action of Congress must be upheld as a constitutional exercise of power within the aforesaid decisions.
A permanent injunction will therefore be granted against the enforcement of the order of the Commission.